Choosing between hospitals

The influence of the experiences of other patients

Journal Article (2012)
Author(s)

I. B. De Groot (Leiden University Medical Center)

W Otten (Leiden University Medical Center)

Joyce Dijs-Elsinga (Leiden University Medical Center)

H.J. Smeets (Haaglanden Medical Center)

J. Kievit (Leiden University Medical Center)

Perla J. Marang-van de Mheen (Leiden University Medical Center)

Affiliation
External organisation
DOI related publication
https://doi.org/10.1177/0272989X12443416
More Info
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Publication Year
2012
Language
English
Affiliation
External organisation
Issue number
6
Volume number
32
Pages (from-to)
764-778

Abstract

Objective. Publicly available information on hospital performance is increasing, with the aim to support consumers when choosing a hospital. Besides general hospital information and information on outcomes of care, there is increasing availability of systematically collected information on experiences of other patients. The aim of this study was to assess the influence of previous patients' experiences relative to other information when choosing a hospital for surgical treatment. Methods. Three hundred thirty-seven patient volunteers and 280 healthy volunteers (response rate of 52.4% and 93.3%, respectively) filled out an Internet-based questionnaire that included an adaptive choice-based conjoint analysis. They were asked to select hospital characteristics they would use for future hospital choice, compare hospitals, and choose the overall best hospital. Based on the respondents' choices, the relative importance (RI) of each hospital characteristic for each respondent was estimated using hierarchical Bayes estimation. Results. Information based on previous patients' experience was considered at least as important as information provided by hospitals. "Report card regarding physician's expertise" had the highest RI (16.83 [15.37-18.30]) followed by "waiting time for outpatient clinic appointment" (14.88 [13.42-16.34]) and "waiting time for surgery" (7.95 [7.12-8.78]). Patient and healthy volunteers considered the same hospital attributes to be important, except that patient volunteers assigned greater importance to "positive judgment about physician communication" (7.65 v. 5.80, P < 0.05) and lower importance to "complications" (2.56 v. 4.22, P < 0.05). Conclusion. Consumers consider patient experience-based information at least as important as hospital-based information. They rely most on information regarding physicians' expertise, waiting time, and physicians' communication when choosing a hospital.

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